| Literature DB >> 35021406 |
Domenico Cassano1, Ana-Katrina Mapanao1,2, Maria Summa3, Ylea Vlamidis1, Giulia Giannone1,2, Melissa Santi1, Elena Guzzolino4, Letizia Pitto4, Laura Poliseno4,5, Rosalia Bertorelli3, Valerio Voliani1.
Abstract
Effective excretion of nanostructured noble metals is still one of the most challenging bottlenecks for their employment in clinical practice. Besides the persistence issue, the clinical translation of inorganic nanomaterials is also affected by a bewildering lack of investigations regarding their quantitative biokinetics. Here, we have quantitatively correlated the chemical nature of the three most interesting noble metals for biomedical applications to their biosafety and biokinetics in, respectively, zebrafish and murine models. Gold, silver, and platinum ultrasmall-in-nano architectures with comparable size elicit, after intravenous administration, different excretion pathways depending on their intrinsic metallic nature. Understanding the in vivo fate of noble metal nanoparticles is a significant breakthrough to unlock their clinical employment for the establishment of treatments for neoplasms, infectious diseases, and neurological disorders.Entities:
Keywords: biodegradation; biokinetics; biosafety; excretion; noble metals; silica
Year: 2019 PMID: 35021406 DOI: 10.1021/acsabm.9b00630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Bio Mater ISSN: 2576-6422